Tyler Glasnow Torches Tanner Scott After Dodgers Blow No-Hit Bid
- Fax Sports

- Sep 10, 2025
- 2 min read
Updated: Sep 12, 2025
LOS ANGELES - Dodger Stadium was supposed to host history Monday night. Instead, it hosted a meltdown — and a shower incident.
Tyler Glasnow had carved through seven no-hit innings against the Colorado Rockies, and Blake Treinen threw a perfect eighth, setting up what looked like the Dodgers’ first combined no-hitter since 2018. Enter Dodgers reliever Tanner Scott. One pitch later, a leadoff double erased everything, and Glasnow has not stopped fuming since.
“That was supposed to be the biggest game of my career — a combined no-hitter at Dodger Stadium — and Tanner ruined it the second he stepped on the mound,” Glasnow said postgame, eyes still burning holes in the carpet.
You can watch his full interview below:
Tanner Scott Causes Dodgers Clubhouse Fallout
Mookie Betts didn’t mince words either.
“We play this game for moments like that, and Tanner straight-up snatched it from us. You can’t just keep blowing up spots like this and expect the boys to rally behind you. At this point, he’s lucky we didn’t DFA him mid-inning.”
Freddie Freeman piled on, visibly irritated as he laced his cleats.
“I’ve been in this league a long time. No-hitters are sacred. Tanner didn’t just give up a hit — he gave up our chance at baseball immortality. And for what? To throw a middle-middle sinker? If I see another pitch like that, I might walk out of the batter’s box and go home.”
And then came Kike Hernández, confirming Glasnow’s shower anecdote like it was just another day.
“Yeah, that was me. I peed on his leg. I thought it would snap him out of this funk he’s been in. Didn’t work. Might’ve made it worse, honestly.”
Scott Speaks on Struggles
To his credit, Tanner Scott faced the music after the game. His voice barely carried above a whisper.
“I let the whole team down. Glas deserved that no-hitter. I deserved the pee, I guess. I just… I don’t know anymore, man.”
Final Takeaway
The Dodgers won the game, but the celebration was quieter than a Padres trophy case. The clubhouse is fractured, Glasnow is looking up legal ways to defer teammates from his life, and Tanner Scott is reportedly showering at home until further notice.
History was one pitch away. Instead, the only thing combined in L.A. Monday night was rage.



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